bobdina
06-06-2009, 03:21 AM
Demand for spec ops troops outpaces growth
By Lolita C. Baldor - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Jun 4, 2009 18:37:50 EDT
WASHINGTON — As the U.S. and its allies pressure insurgents in Afghanistan and Pakistan, there will be a greater need for intelligence in North Africa where extremists seek sanctuary, the military’s top special operations commander told Congress on Thursday.
Adm. Eric T. Olson, head of U.S. Special Operations Command, told the House Armed Services terrorism subcommittee Thursday that increased military pressure “will not necessarily end the [insurgent] activity, it will shift some of the sanctuaries to other places.”
Counterterrorism officials have warned that battle-hardened extremists have been moving from the Pakistan-Afghanistan border to safe havens in north and east Africa, bringing sophisticated terrorist tactics with them.
Olson also said that it will take a long, patient effort to defeat insurgents in Afghanistan and Pakistan and win the hearts and minds of civilians.
Olson also told the subcommittee that his elite special operations forces can’t grow fast enough to meet increasing global demands, so the Pentagon is depending more heavily on support that is not always available from regular forces.
He turned to intelligence concerns in North Africa in response to a question from Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., chairman of the subcommittee.
Smith asked Olson if the special operations forces could use more intelligence and surveillance coverage in North Africa, where al-Qaida has set up a franchise in the vast ungoverned areas.
“We’ve got to find ways of having a better understanding of what is happening there,” Olson said, adding that increased surveillance would be one answer.
In Pakistan, Olson said the U.S. must be careful not to take any action that suggests the Pakistan military is an extension of the U.S. military. And in Afghanistan, he said, the key is to have as small a footprint as possible, and work “village by village, valley by valley.”
“We need to get better at countering Taliban propaganda,” added Smith, saying that the U.S., including Olson’s special operations forces, must work with the locals to get the Afghan people “on our side.”
He said he needs the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines to provide more logistics, intelligence, communications and air transportation support for his troops overseas.
“The non-availability of these force enablers has become our most vexing issue in the operational environment,” Olson said.
Special operations forces can only grow by 3 percent to 5 percent a year, Olson said. But the need for those units to deploy in hot spots around the globe is outpacing that growth, he said.
The mobile, specially trained units carry out more secretive anti-terror missions, and in a number of countries they are used to train foreign forces.
In most cases, however, they rely on their brethren in larger, conventional military units to fuel their helicopters, fix their trucks, transport their troops and provide surveillance and other information.
Olson said there is still a shortage of manned and unmanned surveillance aircraft and systems, which are critical for his forces on the warfront.
Another challenge, he said, will be to ensure that special operations units serving in dangerous areas of Iraq get the support they need as the larger, conventional units leave the country.
There are 135,000 U.S. forces in Iraq, and they are scheduled to leave the cities by June. President Barack Obama has said that all combat forces will be out of the country by the end of August 2010, and all forces will be out of Iraq by the end of 2011.
By Lolita C. Baldor - The Associated Press
Posted : Thursday Jun 4, 2009 18:37:50 EDT
WASHINGTON — As the U.S. and its allies pressure insurgents in Afghanistan and Pakistan, there will be a greater need for intelligence in North Africa where extremists seek sanctuary, the military’s top special operations commander told Congress on Thursday.
Adm. Eric T. Olson, head of U.S. Special Operations Command, told the House Armed Services terrorism subcommittee Thursday that increased military pressure “will not necessarily end the [insurgent] activity, it will shift some of the sanctuaries to other places.”
Counterterrorism officials have warned that battle-hardened extremists have been moving from the Pakistan-Afghanistan border to safe havens in north and east Africa, bringing sophisticated terrorist tactics with them.
Olson also said that it will take a long, patient effort to defeat insurgents in Afghanistan and Pakistan and win the hearts and minds of civilians.
Olson also told the subcommittee that his elite special operations forces can’t grow fast enough to meet increasing global demands, so the Pentagon is depending more heavily on support that is not always available from regular forces.
He turned to intelligence concerns in North Africa in response to a question from Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., chairman of the subcommittee.
Smith asked Olson if the special operations forces could use more intelligence and surveillance coverage in North Africa, where al-Qaida has set up a franchise in the vast ungoverned areas.
“We’ve got to find ways of having a better understanding of what is happening there,” Olson said, adding that increased surveillance would be one answer.
In Pakistan, Olson said the U.S. must be careful not to take any action that suggests the Pakistan military is an extension of the U.S. military. And in Afghanistan, he said, the key is to have as small a footprint as possible, and work “village by village, valley by valley.”
“We need to get better at countering Taliban propaganda,” added Smith, saying that the U.S., including Olson’s special operations forces, must work with the locals to get the Afghan people “on our side.”
He said he needs the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines to provide more logistics, intelligence, communications and air transportation support for his troops overseas.
“The non-availability of these force enablers has become our most vexing issue in the operational environment,” Olson said.
Special operations forces can only grow by 3 percent to 5 percent a year, Olson said. But the need for those units to deploy in hot spots around the globe is outpacing that growth, he said.
The mobile, specially trained units carry out more secretive anti-terror missions, and in a number of countries they are used to train foreign forces.
In most cases, however, they rely on their brethren in larger, conventional military units to fuel their helicopters, fix their trucks, transport their troops and provide surveillance and other information.
Olson said there is still a shortage of manned and unmanned surveillance aircraft and systems, which are critical for his forces on the warfront.
Another challenge, he said, will be to ensure that special operations units serving in dangerous areas of Iraq get the support they need as the larger, conventional units leave the country.
There are 135,000 U.S. forces in Iraq, and they are scheduled to leave the cities by June. President Barack Obama has said that all combat forces will be out of the country by the end of August 2010, and all forces will be out of Iraq by the end of 2011.